Monthly Archives: February 2019

Hello Studio Mates! I just wanted to share an exercise for one of my final classes for my masters in entrepreneurship. We had to create a product introduction video to discuss a minimum viable product to consumers. After all my interviews, conversations, research, and personal experience, I have created a potential program for artists interested in arts business consulting. I call it the Co-Creative Challenge. Give it a watch!

As an artist, do you feel that sense of discord when someone tells you to learn how to market yourself? I know I do. Thinking of myself and my art as a product makes my art spirit raise an eyebrow and slowly shake my head.

Business-minded people see the importance of having a viable product, and more importantly an interested buyer. A business-minded person might very quickly tell an artist to change their product to meet the desires of potential customers. (Thus begins the eyebrow raising.)

Most artists, however, need to make their art without considering who will buy it upon completion. Such is the nature of creating authentic work. Believe me, the world needs the art that is made without profit in mind. Imagine if Vincent Van Gogh had never made Starry Night! Indeed, Van Gogh only sold one of over 900 paintings in his lifetime, Red Vineyard at Arles.

Surely there is a disconnect between selling art and making art, but the good news is that authenticity wins in both business and art-making. Especially now, as modern consumers seek out products and services that have personal stories. Buzz words like handcrafted, artisanal, local and ethical attract modern consumers, but art has always been these things and so much more.

The key to selling yourself is not making art that everyone wants, but finding the people who like your very unique, once in a lifetime voice. Art buyers are looking for art that speaks to them. You make art to say something to the world. Finding where that conversation takes place is how you will create success for your art.

A hobby in art is not the same as an artist who has a creative practice along side another career. For some artists, authentic heART-work requires a multitude of outlets to both be with their work and separate themselves from the challenge of creating authentic work. Therefore, artist’s, more often than not, have a variety of interests and activities outside of making art. These activities feed the artist, both literally and figuratively. What I’ve noticed is that artists can relegate their creative endeavors to “hobby” status either by refusing to do the heart-work required to make compelling art, or by allowing themselves to believe that making art part-time while working at another job precludes them from being a true artist.

In my opinion, the amount of time an artist dedicates to making art does not define the quality of the work. Part-time, full-time, or as the mood strikes as long as the work is deep and authentic. My job as an arts business consultant is not to help you make quality work, but to help you learn how to support your work with income. Worthwhile Studio will help you set goals that define your vision, discover and learn about the people who support your work with purchases, and understand how to manage the financial aspects of being an artist.

If this sounds like something you would like to have under girding your creative practice, then send me an email! I will keep you up to date with my progress in developing this service for artists.

In my interviews this week, I’ve stumbled upon a stereotype about artists that I despise: Artists are flighty, flakey, and full of themselves. Yes, perhaps there are some underdeveloped creative spirits out there who fail to follow through, who agree to a commission they never complete, or believe themselves to be the most talented individual in the room. As my graduate studies come to a finish, I am considering how to help artists develop their creative careers, but I have concerns that this creative group can be unwieldy and troublesome to work with. However, I’m pretty sure this kind of person can be found in almost any profession. People more readily accept this stigma about artists because the creative process can seem so mysterious.

Artists are full of creative ideas. That’s why poets keep journals, painters keep sketchbooks, and bar drinks come with cocktail napkins. In Elizabeth Gilbert’s book Big Magic (which I highly recommend to any artist no matter your medium) she talks about how she believes Ideas find artists to bring them into the world. When an Idea comes to an artist asking to be created, the artist has the choice to work for the Idea or let the Idea move on to another artist. There are myriad reasons why an artist may pass on a particular Idea, and work diligently on others. This is one of the best concepts I’ve ever read that can explain the nature of artists and their flights of fancy with creative Ideas.

Going back to arts business mentorship, I believe it is imperative for an artist to answer to the question, “Is making art your business or your hobby?” Please consider this definition of hobby from Dictionary.com:

HOBBY [hob-ee] Noun, Plural Hob-bies. An activity or interest pursued for pleasure or relaxation and not as a main occupation.

If making money as an artist is not your goal, if you would prefer to create only what you will as the Ideas come and go, then perhaps art is your hobby. Please know, hobby is not a bad word, and does not mean you are not a true artist. It just means your activities surrounding your creative practice are different than someone who plans to support themselves entirely as an artist. If making art and selling it is important to you, then your activities must include more than art creation. The good news is that building a business around art can also be a creative process. Sure, there are finances to consider and websites to be made, but there is also branding, maketing, networking, and so many other creative tasks. Perhaps working on your business can help you take a break from a heavy piece or give you insight about your next body of work. You never know where Ideas come from, but you do have to be ready to accept their offer to bring them into the world. Working on the business side of your art will allow you the opportunity to accept more creative Ideas because your work will be moving out into the world and supporting your next idea with the finances needed to support your studio.

If you are a working artist intent on selling your work, then perhaps an arts business mentor can help you take flight on your journey as a creative entrepreneur.